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E-raamat: Anthropology and Archaeology: A Changing Relationship

  • Formaat: 248 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2002
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781134716210
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  • Formaat: 248 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2002
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781134716210

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This volume provides a valuable introduction to the theories and methods of anthropology and archaeology. It covers the historical relationship and contemporary interests of the two inter-related subjects.

Anthropolgy and Archaeology provides a valuable and much-needed introduction to the theories and methods of these two inter-related subjects.
This volume covers the historical relationship and contemporary interests of archaeology and anthropology. It takes a broad historical approach, setting the early history of the disciplines with the colonial period during which the Europeans encountered and attempted to make sense of many other peoples. It shows how the subjects are linked through their interest in kinship, economics and symbolism, and discusses what each contribute to debates about gender, material culture and globalism in the post-colonial world.
List of illustrations
ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xiv
Anthropological archaeology and archaeological anthropology
1(14)
Anthropological archaeology
2(2)
Anthropological archaeology in North America
4(2)
Anthropological archaeology in Britain
6(3)
My approach to the special relationship
9(6)
PART I Histories
Colonial origins
15(18)
Orders of difference
15(4)
A tale of two collections: part 1
19(3)
The problem of Europe
22(3)
A tale of two collections: part 2
25(8)
Instituting archaeology and anthropology: the role of fieldwork
33(29)
Disciplines, professions, cultures
34(6)
Instituting anthropology
40(12)
Instituting archaeology
52(6)
Doubts about anthropological fieldwork
58(4)
Evolutionary, social and cultural anthropologies
62(24)
The evolutionists: Morgan and Tylor
63(3)
The years of change: Haddon and Rivers
66(4)
Boas, relativism and culture history
70(3)
The hyper-diffusionists
73(2)
Functionalism: Durkheim, Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown
75(11)
The post-war picture: neo-evolution, Marxism and structuralism
86(37)
Neo-evolutionism
88(12)
Revisionist histories
100(5)
Marxism
105(6)
Structuralist and symbolic anthropologies
111(12)
PART II The contemporary scene
Introduction to Part II 119(4)
Bodily identities: gender, sexuality and practice
123(29)
Good practice
124(3)
Dwelling
127(2)
Ritualised actions
129(2)
Gender in anthropology
131(9)
Gender in archaeology
140(6)
Sex and sexuality
146(6)
Material anthropology: landscape, material culture and history
152(27)
Landscape
153(7)
Material culture
160(3)
Creative consumption
163(4)
History
167(4)
Styles of life
171(8)
Globalism, ethnicity and post-colonialism
179(27)
Globalism and economics
181(1)
Globalism and culture
182(3)
Globalism knowledge and representation
185(5)
Ethnic identity
190(4)
Archaeology and ethnicity
194(3)
Post-colonial theory: Said, Spivak and Bhabha
197(6)
Creating the world by way of an ending
203(3)
References 206(15)
Index 221


Chris Gosden is presently lecturer-curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. He has held teaching positions both in Australia and the UK, and has published widely on a range of issues in archaeology and anthropology.